Abstract

This study was designed to test the authors' hypothesis that dopamine passes from dopamine-synthesizing cells in the brain to the systemic circulation prior to the formation of the blood-brain barrier during ontogenesis. High-performance liquid chromatography studies demonstrated that peripheral blood dopamine levels before formation of the blood-brain barrier-in rat fetuses and neonates-are significantly higher than after formation of the barrier in adult rats, providing indirect evidence in support of the hypothesis. Furthermore, formation of the blood-brain barrier is accompanied by a significant increase in dopamine levels in the rat brain. Direct evidence for the hypothesis was obtained in the form of a sharp decrease in blood dopamine levels in fetuses after lesioning of dopamine-synthesizing neurons in the brain by encephalectomy.

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